In September, the One Fund made its second cash payout, a donation totaling $18 million to be divided among Boston Marathon bombing victims and families. That payout brought the total amount of donations to $80 million, and the charity foundation also announced that the second payout would be its last.

And today, December 9, it appears the One Fund has set a date for when it would stop accepting donations, after almost a year and eight months of collecting money for those wounded or affected by the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings.

According to a tweet from Daniel A. Guzman sent to @universalhub, the One Fund will shut down donations on December 15:

The One Fund was formed by Governor Deval Patrick and Mayor Thomas Menino on April 16, one day after the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings that took three leaves and injured hundreds more. After its inception, the One Fund became the go-to foundation for Marathon relief efforts, gathering donations from charity events, Boston Strong T-shirts, philanthropic efforts and more.

Currently, the ‘Donate’ page on the One Fund’s website is still functioning, but we expect that to change in less than a week’s time. We’ll update this story if we hear more information.

Image via Hang Dinh/Shutterstock